The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 27, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 October 1935 — Page 3

THURSDAY’, ’OCTOBER 31, 1935.

Nature’s Ice Box O. K.; Keeps Food 33 Years Nature's Ice box has even the best of niecbanical refrigerators skinned when Incomes to food preservation. Keeping-food In good condition for years Is no trick at all for natural cold storage plants such as the Antarctic wastes. According to Dr. Dana Coman, physician and dietician for the Lincoln Kllsworth-Slr Hubert Wilkins expedition, food left in a shack in the South Polar region 33 years ago was found to be still edible when discovered. The long preserved food supplies were left by a Norwegian explorer. Otto Nbrdenskjold, In 1902.—Washington Post.

., ■ ■ Mothers read this: nan mn r— ITS IfUtYIBS I ——]css«nwfM f A cleansing dose today: a smellier quantity tomorrow: less each time, until bowels need no help al all. —iu I "1 Why do people come home from a hospital with bowels working like a well-regulated watch? The answer is simple, and it’s the | answer to all your bowel worries if you will only realize it: many doctors and hospitals use liquid laxatives. If you knew what a doctor knows, you would use only the liquid form. A liquid can always be taken in gradually reduced doses. Reduced . dosage is the secret qf any recd relief | from constipation. Ask a doctor about this. Ask your | druggist how very popular liquid laxatives have become. They give the right kind of help, and right amount of help. The liquid laxative generally used is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup-Pepsin. It contains senna and cascara — both natural laxatives that can form no habit, even in children. So, try Syrup Pepsin You just take regulated doses till Nature restores regularity. - j The Trouble ■When a man Is In love he sfiy* j what he thinks—and more.

lasthma

Kept her SMOTHERED New free from attacks

“For23 yean I suffered with wmum ■ asthma. Since taking Nacor I haven’t been bothered."-Mr*. Fred Chamberlain. R. R. 8. Birmingham. Ala - Jan. 3, 1934. Why endure the misery and torture of asthma attacks or bronchial cough? Ask your druggist for a bottle of eesy-to-take NACOR KAPS (Nacor in capsule form). No habit-forming drugs. MCtt IttBKSE CO, WNMMPOUS. MR. • AN —■ «••<!* mors < .* / than cosmetics <"*** /* Basao of skia corns* N J from wiSuß.'S'bvocoo>7 *upst»oacl.>«»(a»p»->rt» \ r a with imseaaai wsae*. * (LEANSB INTEBI NMJ.Y with Garfield I *•-*.! Tea. Hein* reiie«« tbs I —J mwrfrmawvafcdfQr

I SNE£ ze [LANES TABLETS ||

su* m bscu q yq os «am mean ■ Wmrßao n mSS * aasraua -JWjBAlt OUL tlMWarwrrtx. tacrtßNMarangiKt Abo McoUsat for Tes*aorary DaafMas “< B**4 Nstas* A*s to eMur«t»n saasW by coH*. Fla and avimaUa*. A. O. LEONARD. lac. >0 Fifth Asa.. How York qty Quick, Complete Pleasant , ELIMINATION Lal's be frank. There's only one way for your body to nd itself ci the waste Mt* , ten that cause acidity, gas, headaches, bloated feelings and a dosen other discomforts —your intestines must function. To make them move quickly, pleasantly, completely, without griping. Thousands of physicians recommend , Milnesis Wafers. (Denttoto recommend Milneeia wafers as an efficient remedy for mouth acidity). These mint Ba voted candy-like wafers are pure milk of magnesia. Each Wafer to approximately equal to a full adult dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly in accordance with the directions on the bottle or tin. then swallowed, they correct acidity, bad breath, flatulence, at their source and at the same time enable qurcJt, complete, pleasant e/tmr natron. MUneeia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and 48 wafers, at 35c and 60c respectively, or in convenient tins containing 12 at 20c. Each wafer to approximately an ad alt dose of milk et magnesia. Al! good drug stares carry them. Start using these effective wafers fcyfay. Pt ofc—lnn el samples sent tree to regtotared phystote— cc dentisto it requeto is made on pscfc—famal letter head. SELECT PRODUCTS, to—rpentod 4403 33*4 SL> Lew tetasMl CMm M. Y

■MILNE Sid a WAFERS I

/ISU ADVENTURERS' bO club kMaAA)' /SUF Nvw* a y/ “Man-Eating Dogs** By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter. HERE’S a yarn from a country that has produced many an adventurer and many a rip-snorting good adventure. The scene is laid on the bleak coast of Labrador, one of the coldi est spots of northern Canada, and the episode I am now about to re- | late—from* the life of Richard Mercer —is one of the most terrifying tales that ever came out of that stormy territory. It was back In October, 19U2. and Dick Mercer was a lad of 14. He was j working on a boat that lay at anchor off the Sandy Islands, and he ran into his life's biggest adventure while doing nothing more spectacular than going ■ down to get the mail. .. Getting mall In Labrador, though, isn't the simple process it Is in more I clviUaed localities. t Ths mail boat out there only stopped at headlands along the coast —left the mall there for the people In the interior, and those up in the bays to come and get it Dick had a comparatively easy trip, compared to some of them. It vias only three miles by land from where his boat was anchored to the l settlement where the mall was left - . ' ‘ Adventures in Labrador Happen Almost Anytime. But it was over a rough trail through deserted country, and you can ' find a dozen adventures on three miles of a Labrador trail. Dick started out' right after breakfast armed with nothing but a short stick to help him over the rough spots of the trail. He had covered about three-quarters of a mile, when suddenly, from a patch of underbrush, two huskies, or Eskimo dogs, came out to meet him. ' "Up in that country,” says Dick, “they have a lot of those dogs. They’re mean, vicious animals, quite capable of killing a man. Their owners put them , out on the islands in the summer—carry boat-loads of fish over to feed them. "Then. In the fall, they’re brought back to the mainland, not any too well fed. and very dangerous." Those two dogs came out of the underbrush snapping and snarling. Dick chased them off with his stick and continued on his way. He hadn't gone more than another half mile when he heard a- - yelping and barking behind him, and turned to see a whole pack of dogs swarming up the trail after him. "Right there," says Dick, "is where 1 got the scare of my life. And, ' brother, that sort of a scare makes the old thinking apparatus work mighty fast. The Brain Plays Tricks at a Time Like This. “I could picture someone finding a skeleton and wondering who it belonged to—remembered tales of other days, of men writing notes telling the finder — OSI' MJ “I Went After Them, Swinging the Stick from Side to Side." that these same animals were even then tearing through the weak roof of the shack they were in with frenzied efforts to get at them. “I didn't even have a shack to protect me long enough to write a note. I wished then that I had brought a rifle along. It might not have done any good, but at least I could have shot down a few of them before they got me." On they came up the trail. Dick racked his brain for some plan of meeting the emergency. Should he run? That would be worse than useless. They would be tearing him to the ground before he got 50 feet Throw atones at them? Dick looked around for some, but there weren't any In sight. There didn't seem to be anything else to do, so he took a stand and raised bis slender stick to fight It out as best he could. “The dogs," says Dick," came up to within eight or ten feet of me, stopped | suddenly and started to pile up on top of one another, snarling and foaming J St the mouth. “My spine felt like a cake of Ice and the muscles of my face twitched with fear. My body seemed to be paralyzed, but I had to do something and do it quick. "I noticed that while they stayed a little distance away from me, I they kept circling—trying to get around behind me. ' j '•That, 1 knew, mustn't happen. 1 remembered, too, hearing of the dog I drivers handling their dogs by making their long whips whistle through the air, and figured that If they were afraid of a whip, they might be afraid of a stick, too. So 1 went after them, swinging the stick from side to side. Dick Battles Exhaustion as Well as Dogs. “They gave ground, but as soon as 1 turned to go they came on worse ! than ever. I couldn't retreat from them—that was just what they were waiting . for. “So I did the only other thing I could. I maneuvered around them I until I got them between mo and the place for which I was heading and began driving them on before me." « Dick was almost exhausted now from a combination of fright and exertion. But he pushed on after the dogs, striking at them'with his | stick when they tagged, driving them on toward the settlement The dogs retreated before him until he had almost reached his destination, j and then they ran off up a trail leading In another direction. Dick told the story when be got the uiail. and the men there told him be was lucky to get out of it alive. They gave him a gun for protection on the way back, but be made the j return trip without seeing even a sign of a dog. WNVMrvtso

I

Use Vines Around Homes to Keep Reptiles Away Negroes tn tbe southern Mates have faith In'various "safe” plants. They plan calabash vines and gourds of certain kind* so that tbey will grow on their cabins or alon fc the garden fences to keep tbe reptiles away by their odor. The pungent, flshy smell of the leaves of the horseshoe geranium Is another, among the many plants Ignorantly regarded as safeguards, or some bow. connected with makes. Careful investigation shows that such sujierstltlous precautions are useless. and. further, botanists assure uz. says a writer tn the Montreal Herald, that no North American plant Is feared or avoided by any snake, venomous or otherwise. Tbe pacing of tbe ashfree among these false protectors is probably a forgotten Importation from tbe oiUworn Ideas of former times tn the

< <- ■ I The improved Order of Red Mew The improved Order of Red Men was organised October 14. 1833. and was founded upon the manners, traditions and customs of the American In diana. It traces back to the secret revolutionary society, Sons of Liberty, which first appeared in Maryland in 1784. through this to the various Tam im» societies Into which the Sons of Liberty merged, and finally to the Society of Red Meo. formed in Philadelphia in ISIS. The Improved order of Red Men was formed in Baltimore.

Old World. Early colonists brought here many bits of ancient lore in natural history, but finding that most of them fitted badly in the new circumstances tbey were gradually abandoned. Now and then a fragment turns up. Tbe pioneer farmers in Massachusetts relied upon a cathartic medicine made of the leaves and bark of the wbite ash as a core for snakebite —especially , that of tbe rattler. One historian quotes an old statement that New England birds fly to that tree and bring back leaves to cover their eggs “when tbe crawling enemy is seen in tbe neighborhood, since the rattler always avrtds white ash? Black Plagw Killed Maay The Black Death (bubonk plague) killed more people than any war, earthquake or flood In history. It is estlf mated that more than 25.00U.009 per- ► sons were killed by the plagaa.

I Life leawraace Banned Ordinary life insurance cannot be obtained by persons in these occupations, say F. V. Smith, Indianapolis, lnd„ in Coiner's Weekly: Narcotic agents, wild animal trainers, aerial performers without nets or safety locks, motorcar racers and factory speed testers, steeplechase riders, storage-battery mixers, caisson (compreased air) workers, men who destroy condemned munitions, wrecking and salvage divers, sponge fishermen and turpentine farm ia borers. ■

SYRACUSE JOURNAL

The Rogues’ Gallery] IST a-1 lixoSTWar / w v) IBS w With the Spreading Advent of Hoss-racing, These Same Women Are Cheerfully Taking Father's Money Out to the Local Track and Trustfully Trying to Run Two Dollars Up to a Small Fortune.

LADIES AT THE RACE « TRACK By FRANK CONDON FOR a long, long time, you were forbidden to do almost anything in this precious country of burs, the spirit of reform was in the saddle, the bluenoses were at the steering wheel and life was pretty gtay for people with liberal views. Now everything is changed and you can do as you please and are the released and famished citizens having fun! They are Indeed. Take horse racing. Not long ago, horse racing was scowled at and looked upon pretty generally as a cardinal sin. You were forbidden to make wagers on the horses as they loped around the track, but recently the law-givers switched over. State after state has legalized hoss-raclng, and what is more Important, wagering on the galloping bezarks. Instantly new vistas opened up to the long-starved Americanos, who love to gamble, the same as the British, the French and the Dutch, and the opening tracks brought forth a brand new class, an unsuspected group of speculators, that you might call the quiet women folk, or the ladies who used to stay at home. It turns out they are hearty gamblers, and nobody knew it Now, then, in those days before hossraclng came back so joyously, the ordinary American housewife didn’t do much betting, as there was no place for her to gamble respectably. The big cities had their racing ladies and feminine gamblers, to be sure, but they belonged to a different social layer and the homestaying women used to read of them in amazement So far as they were concerned themselves, they didn’t even know they, too, were gamblers at heart They thought they were mothers or housewives, or whatever it said in the city directory. With the spreading advent of tjosaracing, these same women are cheerfully taking father’s money out to the local track and trustfully trying to run two dollars up to a small fortune. And it may be a good thing that so many new tracks are flourishing In so -many states, for the Jaded housewives have at length found a happy and exciting way of spending the afternoon. If examined. it will be seen that there is no sense whatever in the methods or systems by which these Inexperienced I dames het on the horses. They are not the hard-faced veterans !of the track. They are not the emoj tionless Pittsburgh Phils of the betting ring. They know nothing at all ! about records or information sheets, but are rapidly learning. Up to now. they are a pop-eyed crowd of guileless and' enthusiastic Imbeciles, betting small sums on the running horses, and astonishing as it may seem, they oft- | en win, to their own delight and the boredom of others in the family, who now must listen to the tales of triumph and disaster. | In the old days, it was father and his golf. He came home evenings from the golf course, and even the cook could tell how he bad fared in his jointings I with the boys by merely looking at him. j It was a bit tiresome to mamma and the boys, but those days are ended. I Mamma is now. speaking at dinner, having either made or hwt $S at the track that afternoon, while father was winning the dally bread at his office It is mother who relates with shining eyes how she bad $2 on the nose, the nose belonging to Flying Fishcake, who galloped in second by a whisker, and if he had only galloped In first, mother would have enriched the family by 22 bucks, gold clause mon<»y. It now takes the old lady about 40 mlautea to describe properly the thrilling fiscal Items of the afternoon, and every one seems Interested, except father. The old boy Is off in a corner and nobody any longer gives a darn about the near-birdie on the sixteenth. He has lost his audience and superfluous lags the veteran on the stage. He doesn’t even mention his birdies these days, and 1 doubt If he would refer to an eagle. He is simply a member of the family who used to have something to talk about nights, and is now merely a shelf sitter oncer. If those states that have not as yet legalized racing proceed to legalize racing. then we may as well give up the ghost, for the home-staying female population of our sainted land is almost certain to step right into the game. We have always depended upon the sterling character of our womenfolk. but It appears that their weak spot is gambling, and especially on horses running. They are all innate speculators, though millions of them conceal the vice beneath a cloak of austerity, and the less they know about any given racket, the heartier they whirl in and take a crack at It Take, for example, the church-mouse home-keeper out here tn Los Angeles, who has been recently making small sums of money betting on the ponies at the new Santa Anita track, wagering her money only onwainy days, or with the track heavy. 1 have met the 6>

ladly. so I am not making this up. Before hoss-racing. she had never gambled at all, except for a rare fling at the roulette wheel at Agua Caliente, maybe once every two years. She had never seen a horse race until Santa Anita dawned upon a delighted populace, and then she began operations in a small, modest way. saying nothing to anyone, asking no odds, seeking no special information, working out her own fortunes. She won. too. not large sums, but sufficient to keep her excited. She waited patiently for a muddy track and then bet on a horse that weighed ,93 pounds, calculating that a horse weighing 95 pounds would do better in the thick mire than a heavy weighing, say, 125 pounds. These* things she told me. I said In some surprise: "Listen, madam, there isn’t any such thing as a horse weighing 95 pounds. You're thipking of goats. Even a small hbrse weighs about a 1,000 pounds. So what are you talking about?" She made indignant answer, showed me her program of the day, with the weights in plain figures, and when I explained that those weights referred to the heft of the jockeys. She didn’t even blush. She is now about a hundred ahead, betting on 80-pound horses. New England is historically supposed to be the stern and rock-bound part of the nation, with all the sturdy virtues, tight as the Scotch, independent, wary about money matters, steady going and thrifty, the residents going in strong for savings banks and the quiet life. Well, they opened up a new track near Boston last summer, and the hardheaded Puritans almost trampled each other to death, trying to get" in. The daily attendance looked like the first German army. The daily take was something preposterous and dumbfounded the owners.. The daily betting looked like what France owes and won’t pay. Answer? Well, the people of New Engl arid haven’t had opportunity to bet on anything but crack-spitting for the last 90 years, and the old libido rushed to the surface, causing the money to flow like water. Even grandmother,, whose last bet was a box of candy on the Confederate Army, is removing currency from the kitchen Jar and hot-footing out to the bangtails. There is an ancient race track saying, but the housewives of today never heard of it—“a horse player always dies broke.” That is as sound and true a strffement as the other wise crack about death and taxes, but it gives no pause in these light-hearted times for here yon have a generation that was almost verboten clear off the merry-go-round and can now do anything it pleases, up to standing on the head. Look at Indiana. There Is a spectacle—good, old. Indiana state, where Booth Tarkington and George Ade used to live in an elder day. Just a short time back. Iqdiana bad all the blue nose laws and you would scarcely dare kiss your wife without a license from the governor. During prohibition. if the sheriff caught you with a black bottle, he hanged you and sent your family to Siberia. Liquor all over the place, race tracks, dog tracks, deer tracks, bear tracks and I believe tbey. Issue you a six months’ license to shoot persons you don’t approve of. I confidently expect that In the near future. Indiana will be going In brazenly for cockfighting. bull-fighting, duelling, pelotte. gambado, kantikoy. greasy pole, kiss In the ring.. what's my thought, crambo, skittles, halma, nine men’s morris and snip-snap-snorem. To return to hoss-raclng and lt« astounding effect upon our home-loving womenfolk, the ladies have always adored roulette, craps, black-jack and chuck-«-iuck. all games wherein the customer has no more chance than butter In the oven. The trouble was, they never had opportunities, for a real lady cannot walk into a mere gambling joint, with rough men everywhere. So the dames* were forced to be content with their inhibitions, submerged desires, frozen appetites and such, until horse-racing loomed, and suddenly became as respectable and widespread as influenza. i Thus It Is that father cannot get hold of the morning paper any more, as mother is engrossed In today’s entries, tryjng to figure out whether Leaping Lipstick will have a chance to show in the third race. Downtown in the business offices, the stenographers chip Into a pool 25 cents a race. In the suburbs, tlw bridge-playing dames have set aside their cards and are out at the track, and so there is a genuine problem facing the fathers, breadwinners and beads of families in this broad nation —how far to let the women go with this new freedom—and no doubt the family heads will solve it as skillfully and thoroughly as they have solved aU the other serious financial problems of the last six years. • Frank Condon.—W!CV SarvlM.

WBssSss iMra6vEb^ UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY! chool Lesson By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D, Mambar of Faculty. Moody Blbia institute of Chicago. 0 Weetem Newspaper Union. Lesson for November 3 JUDAH TAKEN CAPTIVE LESSON TEXT—II Kings 15:1-11. GOLDEN TEXT—Righteousness sxzlteth a nation: but sin is a reproach to any people.—Proverbs 14:14. PRIMARY TOPIC—A Black Man God Cared For. JUNIOR TOPIC—In Time of Danger. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPlC—Results of Doing Wrong. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPlC—Nations Accountable to God.., I. Ths Siege of Jerusalem (vv. s l-3). 1. The time (vv. 1,2). It began on the tenth day of the tenth month of the ninth year or Zedekiab’s reign, lasting about eighteen months. The tenth month, according to the Jew’s calendar, corresponds to our December-Jan- j uary, as their calendar began about the middle of March. The reason the exact time is given is that this was to be an event of great importance to the Jews In their exile. In their i gloomy exile God directed Ezekiel to utter a parable unto the captives of that day (Ezek. 24). 2. The method (v. 11). Nebuchadnezzar came in person with a large army and encamped against Jerusalem, j building forts against it round aboutIt is thought that several wails were built around the city, shutting it in. On the tops of these walls forts were built from which missiles of destrue- . j tion could be hurled by their engines : of war against the city. With the city thus shut in, its fall was only a question of time. 3. The famine (p, 3). Geikle says, "It was speedily followed, as is always case, with an outbreak of pesttFood was well-nigh gone. There i had long been no bread. Mothers were at last driven to murder and | eat their children. The richest citizens wandered about searching for scraps in the dung hills.” Even outside the city the people were starving. “There was no bread for the people of the land.” It is estimated that one-third of the people of Jerusalem died of starvation. 11. Zedekiah’s Flight and Fate (vv. 4-7). , 1. "The city was broken up” (v. 4). The Chaideans had succeeded ,in making an opening In the wall so large that they could make their way into the city in spite of all that the Hebrews could do. Resistance was carried on to the bitter end. 2. Zedekiab's flight (v. 4). The king with his men of war fled by night toI ward the plain. His object no doubt was to cross the Jordan at Jericho and hide in thb mountains east of tbe Jordan. 3. Zedekiah’s fate (vv. 5-7). a. He was overtaken in the plains of Jericho (v. 5). As soon as the Chaldean army discovered the flight : they pursued and captured him. b. He was brought to the king of Babylon at Riblah (v. 6).* Riblah was , a town north of Damascus. It was | the king’s headquarters from which he c directed his armies against Tyre and Jerusalem. Before Nebuchadnezzar Zedeklah was tried as a criminal. c. His fate. His sons were slain in his sight His own eyes were put out He was bound with ’fetters of brass and they carried him to Babylon where he remained a prisoner to the day of his death (Jer. 52:11). 111. Jerusalem Destroyed (vv. 8-10). The dismantling of the city was delayed a month, perhaps awaiting instructions from Nebuchadnezzar who was at Riblah. The work of destruction was executed by tbe officer next in rank to the king. 1. They burnt the house of the Lord (v. 9). This was the sacred temple built by Solomon, with additions aud alterations. Before burning it, they plundered it of all Its sacred “ contents. 2.J Burnt the king's bouse (v. »). This was doubtless the palace built by Solomon. X Burnt all the houses of Jeruj saiem (v. 9), The Implication is that the common houses were left for the people (v. 12). 4 4. They broke down the walls of Jerusalem. The aim in this was to render the walls useless as a means of defense. IV. The Disposition of the Temple Furniture and Priests (vv. I 1. The temple furniture carried to ; Babylon (w. 13-17). The pillars of | brass and tbe brazen sea were broken Into pieces by the Babylonians and together with the utensils were carried to Babylon. 2. Certain officers and priests taken to Riblah (vv., 18-21). These officers and priests and three score men of tbe land were taken to Jliblah. where they were slain by the king of Babylon. The events recorded in Second Kings cover a period of 308 years. God had said. "If thou wilt, then 1 will”; they had Invited disaster by disobedience. Good Sense Good sense Is as different from genius as perception is from invention; yet though distinct qualities, they frequently subsist together. It is altogether opposed to wit, but by no means inconsistent with IL It is not science, for there is such a thing as unlettered good sense; yet, though it be neither wit. learning, nor genius, it Is a substitute for each when tbey do not exist, and the perfection of-all when they do.—Hannah More. Ble»«inga Reflect upon your present blessings, of which every man has many; not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some. Experience In youU> we learn how little we can do for oiissehres, |n age bow little we can do for ethers. The wisdom of experience is incommunicable. Friends -Friends are as companions of a jour-1 IK. who ought to aid each other, as | preservers on the road to a happier life.—Pythagoras.

"DUTCH BOY” STRING HOLDER By GRANDMOTHER CLARK If you take the little Dutch Boy Into your kitchen we feel sure he j will work well for you. You will like him. Size when made up about 8 by 12 inches. This package No. contains ■ tbe stamped material for the pants and suspeqders to be cut out, also died-out heiad, body ahd shoes print-■ terial with directions how to make up this holder will be mailed for 15 cents for one package or four packages for 50 cents. Address Home Craft Co., Dept A, Nineteenth and St. Louis St I Louis, Mo. Inclose stamped, ad- . dressed envelope for reply when writ--1 ing for any information. I Some Indian* Cannibal* Proof that cannibalism was pracI ticed among American Indians is claimed by Lloyd A. Wilford, an- • thropologist of the University of I Minnesota. An Indian burial mound , at Laurel produced skeletons with arm, leg and skull bones crushed to I permit drainage of bone marrow, which was used, he believes, either for food or tanning purposes. EATS OATMEAL TO I HELP KEEP FIT • It mzy be one of Nature’s lowest cost foods, but lucky is the boy or girl Atho gets it for breakfast every morning. Many are nervous, poor in appetite, system out of order, because their daily diets lack enough of the precious Vitamin B for keeping fit.* Few things keep them back like a lack 1 of this protective food element. So give everyone Quaker Oats every morning. Because in addition to its generous supply of Vitamin B for keeping fi«i* it furnishes food-energy, muscle and body-building ingredients. For about per dish. Start serving it tomorrow for a 2-weeks test. Quaker Oats has a wholesome, nutlike, luscious appeal to the appetite. Flavory, surpassingly good. All grocea supply it. •Fern it due te lack tfViUnua B IN VITAMIN B FOR KEEPING FIT . . . — lc worth of Quaker Oats euualz 3 cakes of F rest Yeast <W*fc*r and M*th*r*» Oat* ary tba a— Missed ? Since bridge is so popular, there is no occasion for parlor tricks from any of the guests at a’party. to a cup of flour I for most recipes. J BAKING POWDER farm# price asdSyettrsago 25 •aasss far 25« Mass! aetsrod fcy Baklsg PrwAsr Spnninßm wtesak* ■MMag *st Bsldag PswOsr. IVNU—A 44—35 PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Dandruff -Stop. Hair Filltaf .Ji Imparts CoUr and 'W Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair and ;i N at Draam Mtxamwnx Wfcy.. Hd-nnfye.Njj FLORESTON SHAMPOO —ldeal for twa in < hair soft and fluffy. SleentebymallarstdrarChwnieal Work*. Patehom Ml.

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